Excess Baggage: Transatlantic Identity, Belonging and Performance Diasporas, 1850 - 1910
Excess Baggage: Transatlantic Identity, Belonging and Performance Diasporas, 1850 - 1910
What follows, in four case studies, is an interrogation of the role that identity played in performance in the transatlantic cultural world between 1850 and 1910. I look at performers because their transnational struggles and assimilations of belonging were, and remain, visible precisely as they engaged with theatricality and performativity in the production of saleable and exchangeable cultural commodities. Identity and belonging are etched into the theatrical diasporas that these people traversed and, I argue, are clearly visible situations that should be taken into account when considering their historical narratives. Investigating their situations in this way is new work, which I hope will open doors to a deeper understanding and a more inclusive historicisation of performance and performers at the Fin de Siècle.
Theoretically I both argue from a cultural materialist position in considering performance cultures and commodities and with social science paradigms when considering assimilation typologies and strategy. Situating typologies of transnational belonging and social science strategies of integration within a cultural history of performance is new work, which relies on the post-modern turn toward interdisciplinary historical analysis. Indeed, the fields of identity studies and immigration studies are relatively new. In introducing recent theory to the very rich material life of late nineteenth century performance culture I hope to extend the life of the argument that there is much to know and rewrite in narratives of the players of this period.
Performance History, Historiography, Cultural History, Intersectional Identity, Transatlantic, Exchange
Millette, Holly-Gale
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2012
Millette, Holly-Gale
909906ff-426b-47ab-a71a-5788ea36c213
Bush-Bailey, Gilli
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Bratton, Jackie
986bc9bc-6e5d-494e-8f64-603e844b7142
Millette, Holly-Gale
(2012)
Excess Baggage: Transatlantic Identity, Belonging and Performance Diasporas, 1850 - 1910.
Royal Holloway University of London, Doctoral Thesis, 337pp.
Record type:
Thesis
(Doctoral)
Abstract
What follows, in four case studies, is an interrogation of the role that identity played in performance in the transatlantic cultural world between 1850 and 1910. I look at performers because their transnational struggles and assimilations of belonging were, and remain, visible precisely as they engaged with theatricality and performativity in the production of saleable and exchangeable cultural commodities. Identity and belonging are etched into the theatrical diasporas that these people traversed and, I argue, are clearly visible situations that should be taken into account when considering their historical narratives. Investigating their situations in this way is new work, which I hope will open doors to a deeper understanding and a more inclusive historicisation of performance and performers at the Fin de Siècle.
Theoretically I both argue from a cultural materialist position in considering performance cultures and commodities and with social science paradigms when considering assimilation typologies and strategy. Situating typologies of transnational belonging and social science strategies of integration within a cultural history of performance is new work, which relies on the post-modern turn toward interdisciplinary historical analysis. Indeed, the fields of identity studies and immigration studies are relatively new. In introducing recent theory to the very rich material life of late nineteenth century performance culture I hope to extend the life of the argument that there is much to know and rewrite in narratives of the players of this period.
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More information
Submitted date: 2011
Published date: 2012
Keywords:
Performance History, Historiography, Cultural History, Intersectional Identity, Transatlantic, Exchange
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 456471
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/456471
PURE UUID: e5717d8c-3010-4776-bd15-fdc55f8dac4b
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Date deposited: 03 May 2022 16:39
Last modified: 19 Nov 2022 02:42
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Contributors
Thesis advisor:
Gilli Bush-Bailey
Thesis advisor:
Jackie Bratton
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